Episode 368 What Entrepreneurs Get Wrong About Heaven | Randy Alcorn
MAR 31, 202655 MIN
Episode 368 What Entrepreneurs Get Wrong About Heaven | Randy Alcorn
MAR 31, 202655 MIN
Description
Eternal Perspective: Rewiring How Entrepreneurs Think About Rewards, Heaven, and the Joy of Work
Host Justin Forman sits down with Randy Alcorn—author of 65 books including the bestselling Treasure Principle and Heaven—for a conversation that will upend some of the most common misconceptions entrepreneurs carry about rewards, happiness, holiness, and what work looks like in eternity. Recorded with the kind of candor that only comes from two people who genuinely love ideas, this episode digs into why so many Christians—especially driven, ambitious entrepreneurs—have quietly believed things about heaven and reward that simply aren't in the Bible.
Randy unpacks the Protestant Reformation's unintended legacy, the Greek roots of "blessed" and "happy," and why Jim Elliot's most famous quote is actually about gain. He also shares the surprising rhythm behind decades of prolific writing—and what it means to partner with God to set something in motion that lasts.
Key Topics:
Why the happiness vs. holiness debate gets both wrong—and how God actually calls us to both
How the Protestant Reformation created an overcorrection against rewards that still shapes evangelical thinking today
What entrepreneurs get wrong about heaven—and why a "bucket list" mentality actually reveals a low view of eternity
Work before the Fall: Why the new earth will have real labor, real joy, and real collaboration
The through line across 65 books: Eternal perspective as the framework for stewarding time, money, and calling
Notable Quotes:
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose." — Jim Elliot (quoted by Randy Alcorn)
"God has not simply called us to holiness. God has called us also to happiness, and there is no conflict whatsoever between them." — Randy Alcorn
"We affirm a belief in the resurrection but it's as if we're not wrapping our minds around what it means." — Randy Alcorn